File Operations in Python
Internal
Check whether a File Exists
os.path
import os.path
file_exists = os.path.exists(path_to_file)
Returns True
or False
.
pathlib
Path
represents a filesystem path that offers methods to do system calls on path objects. Depending on your system, instantiating a Path
will return either a PosixPath
or a WindowsPath
object. You can also instantiate a PosixPath
or WindowsPath
directly, but cannot instantiate a WindowsPath
on a POSIX system or vice versa.
from pathlib import Path
path = Path(path_to_file)
path.is_file()
New Path
instance can be constructed from a Path
instance:
path = Path('.')
path2 = Path(path, './some-file.txt')
Convert the Path
to a string with str()
:
path = Path('.')
print(str(path))
resolve(strict=False)
Relative paths ("../../..") can be "resolved" with:
path = Path('/Users/ovidiu/..')
print(path.resolve()) # will display "/Users"
Other pathlib Methods
cwd()
home()
samefile(other_path)
iterdir()
glob(pattern)
rglob(pattern)
absolute()
stat()
group()
open(mode='r', buffering=-1, encoding=None, errors=None, newline=None)
read_bytes()
read_text(encoding=None, errors=None)
write_bytes(data)
write_text(data, encoding=None, errors=None)
touch(mode=0o666, exist_ok=True)
chmod(mode)
lchmod(mode)
unlink(missing_ok=False)
rmdir()
lstat()
link_to(target)
rename(target)
replace(target)
symlink_to(target, target_is_directory=False)
exists()
is_dir()
is_file()
is_mount()
is_symlink()
is_block_device()
is_char_device()
is_fifo()
is_socket()
expanduser()
Reading/Writing from/to Files
Read
Understand this idiom. What does with
do? Does it automatically close the file when it exits the block? Apparently this is a "context manager".
with open('somefile.txt', 'rt') as f:
text = f.read()
print(text)
f = open(''filename'', ''mode'')
c = f.read()
f.close()
f = open('somefile', 'rt')
c = f.read()
f.close()
Mode: "r", "w", "x", etc. "t" text, "b" binary
Write
f = open('/Users/ovidiu/tmp/out.json', 'wt')
f.write("test\n")
f.close()
Working Directory
import os
print('getcwd:', os.getcwd())
Also see:
The Path of the Running Script File
print('__file__:', __file__)
Paths
os.path.basename
returns the file name from the file path:
import os
print(os.path.basename(__file__))
os.path.dirname
returns the directory name from the file path.
import os
print(os.path.dirname(__file__))
os.path.abspath
return the absolute path from a file path.
os.path.splittext
returns the file name from the file path.
Use the pathlib module to extract directory name.
Removing Files
import os
os.remove("somefile.txt")
os.rmdir("somedir") # removes an empty directory
shutil.rmtree() # deletes a directory and all its contents.
Path
objects from the Python 3.4+ pathlib
module also expose these instance methods:
pathlib.Path.unlink() # removes a file or symbolic link.
pathlib.Path.rmdir() # removes an empty directory.
Temporary Files
Create a named temporary file, write in it and return the name. The file is not automatically deleted after close()
, the caller will need to delete it:
import tempfile
with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(mode='w+t', delete=False) as t:
t.write(something)
return t.name